Department for Education

Publication of guidance

Nadhim Zahawi: Today I am publishing two pieces of statutory safeguarding guidance which set the framework within which all practitioners should operate in order to protect children from abuse and neglect and promote their best interests.These are:revised Working Together to Safeguard Children statutory guidance;new Local Safeguarding – Transitional Arrangements statutory guidance.Working Together to Safeguard Children (2018) has been revised to implement the safeguarding reforms introduced through the Children and Social Work Act 2017 and related regulations.In broad terms these are:the replacement of Local Safeguarding Children Boards with new local safeguarding arrangements, led by three safeguarding partners (local authorities, chief officers of police, and clinical commissioning groups);a new system of local and national child safeguarding practice reviews, which will replace serious case reviews; andnew arrangements for child death reviews, to be led by clinical commissioning groups and local authorities.The opportunity has also been taken to make other minor changes to clarify processes or to reflect recent changes to policy, for example through the insertion of guidance on contextual safeguarding which includes protecting children from threats from such as criminal and sexual exploitation.In parallel, we are also publishing updated practice guidance, Information sharing advice for safeguarding practitioners, which reflects these safeguarding reforms and changes made through the Data Protection Act 2018.This is an important piece of guidance which will sets out the drive on the left rules for agencies, organisations and practitioners to know what they must do individually and collectively to safeguard children. It sets out how they should work together in fulfilling this responsibility, including taking a child-centred and co-ordinated approach to safeguarding. At the same time, these documents support practitioners to exercise their expertise and judgement on how best to protect children and young people, and promote their welfare.Protection from abuse and neglect is a fundamental right for all children. Nothing is more important than keeping children safe. These documents will help all those working with children to do just that.


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Ministry of Justice

Courts Update

Lucy Frazer: Today, I am laying before Parliament legislation reducing court fees for certain proceedings in the civil courts and the Court of Protection in England and Wales. As a result, claimants bringing these proceedings will pay less to access the courts.The reduction to these fees follows a thorough and detailed review undertaken by officials in the Ministry of Justice into the cost of these proceedings. Our review has identified a number of cases where the fees charged were above full cost recovery levels. We are therefore taking action to reduce those fees. We will also be establishing a refund scheme to reimburse people the amounts they have been over-charged. We are also taking action to refund those who have been overcharged fees to commence certain low value personal injury claims, known as “stage 3” claims. Officials are working on the detailed arrangements and full details of the scheme, including the types of case affected, and how to apply, will be announced in due course.These changes affect the fees charged for certain proceedings in the Court of Protection; a number of civil proceedings in the magistrates’ courts; fees for general applications in insolvency proceedings; and the fees charged for High Court judges sitting as arbitrators. The intention when these fees were prescribed was that they should be set at, or below, full cost recovery levels and it was on that basis that they were approved by Parliament.As part of our ongoing improvements we are making to the justice system, including the Government’s £1bn investment in Court Reform, we will continue our review of court fees, including the methodology for setting those fees, to minimise the risk of this issue re-occurring in future. The vision of the reform is to modernise and upgrade the court and tribunal system so that it works even better for everyone, from the victims of crime, witnesses and litigants to judges and legal professionals.


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Department for Transport

HS2 Phase 2b Eastern Leg Rolling Stock Depot location announcement

Chris Grayling: I would like to update the house on plans for the HS2 Phase 2b Eastern Leg Rolling Stock Depot. I am today confirming the depot should be located at a site in the Aire Valley, adjacent to the M1, to the east of Leeds. This decision is laid out in today’s publication of the HS2 Phase 2b Eastern Leg Rolling Stock Depot Consultation Response.It was originally proposed that the depot be sited near Crofton, east of Wakefield. Due to operational and community concerns after the M18/ Eastern Route decision was announced, I asked HS2 Ltd to review alternative options for the depot site. The east of Leeds site was identified and a consultation seeking views on this proposed location was launched on 17 July 2017 and ran until 12 October 2017. The consultation revealed broad support for the new location.This decision has been made with local development plans on the wider site in mind. HS2 Ltd will continue to work with stakeholders to support local regeneration proposals on the wider site.


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Department for Exiting the European Union

Publishing proposed negative SIs before laying under the EU (Withdrawal) Act 2018

Mr Steve Baker: With the Royal Assent of the EU (Withdrawal) Act 2018, the Government has started laying affirmative statutory instruments to prepare the statute book for exit. The Government will not lay negative statutory instruments requiring sifting until the necessary procedures for establishing the new Committee in the Commons and the expansion of the remit of the House of Lords’ Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee are concluded. However, the Government is starting to publish final drafts of the negative statutory instruments that require sifting (‘proposed negatives’) on Gov.uk as they are ready. This is to increase transparency and to allow Parliament and the public to have early sight of the forthcoming legislation. 


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Foreign and Commonwealth Office

Hurricane Preparedness in the Caribbean Overseas Territories

Boris Johnson: The United Kingdom is strongly committed to working closely with the British Overseas Territories in the Caribbean, to support their efforts to be as well prepared for the hurricane season as possible. In that context, the UK and the Overseas Territories share a collective responsibility for hurricane preparedness and are therefore working together to prepare for this year’s hurricane season. The hurricane season runs from June to November, with the period of highest risk from August to October. Following the devastating impact of hurricanes Irma and Maria last September, there remain some serious challenges in preparing for this year’s season, especially in those territories still recovering from the last year’s Category 5 hurricanes. The UK remains fully committed to supporting their ongoing recovery, while also helping with preparations and resilience.We have learned important lessons from our response last year, and are working to ensure an even stronger response to any hurricane this year. This includes strengthened coordination and communication with the Overseas Territories themselves, with regional countries and institutions, and involving other partners with territories in the region. We have prepared clearer guidance on command and control structures, and mechanisms for earlier escalation once there is a reasonable possibility that a hurricane is heading to the region. The Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) (alongside key partners) will monitor the impacts that any severe weather event during the hurricane season could have on the Overseas Territories. The FCO in consultation with Number 10 and the Civil Contingencies Secretariat in the Cabinet Office, will work together to understand the nature and complexity of the situation and the severity of the impacts that are likely to be seen. As required, Government will stand up crisis response systems, to coordinate and drive the response to the affected Overseas Territories.The FCO, DFID and MOD are working closely to prepare for the hurricane season, drawing in other departments and agencies as necessary. This year, the Met Office has also developed improved advisory arrangements for the Caribbean, and we are working more closely with them to gain a better understanding of the technical data as tropical storms are identified and develop.Through the Conflict, Security and Stability Fund (CSSF), the FCO has boosted its disaster preparedness capability in the region through the contracting of experts from the Stabilisation Unit, who are leading on negotiations in advance of peak hurricane season on a number of commercial contracts to deliver essential recovery needs. This will complement the emergency provisions based on RFA Mounts Bay, and free up military assets to concentrate on key tasks such as helping to get ports and airports reopened for delivery of supplies. We are also drawing up agreements to ensure that other services can be deployed rapidly if needed. This work is complementary to longer term strategic planning work over the next three years under the FCO-run Overseas Territories Disaster Management Programme and the Anguilla and British Virgin Islands (BVI) Recovery Programmes, funded by the CSSF. This also follows on from CSSF funded work over the past six months to boost early recovery efforts including but not limited to: re-electrification for Anguilla and BVI; infrastructure support to Anguilla’s airport; and security agency support, which includes infrastructure, capacity building and social housing. A project underway to hurricane-strengthen the hospital on Anguilla is a good example of increasing resilience and “building back better”.We are also planning to pre-position more resource in theatre during the hurricane season and to have a greater range of specialist capabilities on stand-by. The MOD has carried out reconnaissance and analysis in the Overseas Territories, building links and familiarity with local and regional disaster management personnel, conducting professional analysis of selected critical infrastructure, and gaining a detailed understanding of the overall state of the Overseas Territories. A multi-national coordination cell located in the Caribbean (MNCCC) will be set up to provide integrated logistical coordination between partner countries and organisations, including the UK, USA, Canada, the Netherlands and France, working alongside the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA). This will enable a single integrated process for assessing, communicating, deciding on and responding to needs in the independent Caribbean and the Overseas Territories.MOD’s preparations and planning for hurricane relief in the Caribbean in 2018 have been extensive. The Defence contribution will be more specialised than in 2017 and will exploit MOD’s unique capabilities to best effect. The response will be scalable dependant on need and rely upon specialist forces positioned in the region – including RFA Mounts Bay, already on station. This will enable immediate assistance and damage assessments, informing the carefully tailored response force to follow. The priorities of any response are threefold: to clear a path for others, to support communications, and to ensure security should it prove necessary. Essential aid and supplies cannot enter the affected islands, or be effectively distributed, unless ports and airports are re-opened and public order and a sense of security are upheld.The Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Fund (CCRIF) paid out over $50m to Caribbean countries and territories affected by the 2017 Hurricanes. However, not all islands were insured. This year, the UK has supported BVI and Montserrat to join as new members. Now, all of the islands which were affected last year are covered by CCRIF, which DFID originally helped develop.DFID is preparing hands-on help as an early response mechanism, in the form of fast mobilisation of humanitarian and logistics experts and essential supplies if required. DFID has embarked emergency supplies in RFA Mounts Bay, and can air-lift other essential humanitarian items and work with professional humanitarian partners on the ground if required. DFID is supporting CDEMA to improve its procurement and logistics capacity and stands ready to fund its first responders to disaster affected countries. DFID has well established programmes in the poorer Commonwealth countries of the Caribbean and, in addition to humanitarian assistance, is supporting reconstruction efforts in the hurricane-affected islands of Dominica and Antigua and Barbuda. DFID has also fielded a preparedness mission to the region from 5 – 17 June to coordinate UK preparations with both national and regional institutions.We have engaged with the governments of the Overseas Territories to ensure that their plans are as robust as possible, and to bolster their command and control capabilities as well as their capacity to deal with early humanitarian requirements. We are also planning to deploy certain skills and additional support to the islands in advance of a storm’s arrival or immediately thereafter. Staff with relevant skills who can be deployed at short notice have been identified.The UK hosted an event on 28 June with a number of partner countries (France, the Netherlands, Canada, and the USA). Several countries in the region, including the Cayman Islands, Jamaica, Barbados and Mexico, attended together with CDEMA. This meeting covered three key areas: military assistance, emergency humanitarian assistance, and political/communications, as well as how we best support affected individuals. The UK is hoping to have the outcomes endorsed at a meeting at Ministerial level before the end of July. Greater cooperation in these areas will lead to a stronger and more effective regional response in the event of a hurricane hitting our Overseas Territories in the Caribbean.


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Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Ivory Bill: English Votes for English Laws - Analysis of Government Amendments for Report Stage

David Rutley: I have today published a written submission outlining the Government’s analysis of how the English Votes for English Laws principle relates to all Government amendments tabled for Report Stage of the Ivory Bill.The Department’s assessment is that the amendments do not change the territorial application of the Bill.The analysis holds if all the Government amendments be accepted. I have deposited a copy of the submission in the Libraries of the House. 


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